Riding on rollers can be an appealing option at this time of year, and if preparations for Christmas have left you cash strapped GCN’s new video shows you how to make your own for 20 quid.
Here’s what you need:
• 2 x 5ft lengths of 4 x 2in wood
• 6 right angle brackets
• 3 rolling pins
• Inner tube
• Puncture repair kit
• 2 Camembert lids (yes, the cheese)
• 8 x 4in screws
You’ll also need these tools:
• Drill
• Screwdriver
• Saw
• Tape measure
• Scissors
• Pencil
The video shows you exactly what to do, and it looks very simple. Essentially, you build a wooden frame, mount the rolling pins on to it, and use the inner tube to provide the drive for the front wheel.
You know how some rolling pins are just a single piece of shaped wood, and others have an axle down the middle and handles that don’t rotate while you’re doing the rolling? Okay, you’ve never actually given it much thought before, but take my word for it.
Anyway, GCN have used the latter type, so the main body of the rolling pin spins on the axle as you pedal, and the handles are fixed on the wooden frame. This means there’s no friction between the rolling pins and the frame, which is good news.
The bad news is that there’s a hell of a lot of friction inside those rolling pins. Rubbing dry wood together fast is a really good way to start a fire. GCN are fully aware of this!
“These rollers won’t be anywhere near as good as a set you can buy from the shop,” says GCN’s James Morell. “They’ve got a lot of resistance and they’re basically all-round rubbish, but you can build a set of rollers for £20.”
So, they’re not the answer to all your roller needs, then.
You might be able to make yourself something half-decent using industrial plastic rollers instead of the rolling pins. You could get yourself three 50 x 400mm rollers on eBay for just over £20, for example.
If you have any other suggestions for improving the design, share them down below.
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14 comments
I thought about doing something like this using the industrial rollers but once you add up all of the material costs and factor in the time spent putting it all together it just didn't seem worthwhile. If you were able to obtain some industrial rollers cheaply/freely (perhaps from a scrapped machine) it would probably look more attractive.
The rolling pin design could be improved by removing the rolling pin handles, drilling out the remining wooden tube to accept one or more cartridge bearings in each end running these on off-the-shelf threaded steel bar and bolts. The frame could also be drilled to accept the bar rather than using the mounting plates.
At the very least, get those rolling pins apart and get some lube in there. Lard or margarine seem appropriote choices but lots of cheap grease would probably work too.
Saw some nice stainless rolling pins with silicone surfaces in Sainsbury's yesterday, but they'd be a bank-breaking £10 each.
Back in the day, a mate of mine made his own rollers using lengths of plastic drainpipe for the rollers.
it wooden work.
Bit of a half baked idea!
Well done to all involved, I genuinely love the concept. Far better than some the ideas on Kickstarter !
You could lathe a groove on the outside of the rolling pins for the tube to sit in, and save a fiver on cheese boxes?
But they didn't spend a fiver on cheese boxes, they used some that were going spare. It's nearly Christmas, finding a couple of cheeses that are going to be eaten anyway isn't going to be hard.
Your weight is going to be distributed (unevenly, admittedly) over three rollers. These ones have a limit of 42kg per roller, and you can easily find ones with higher limits at similar prices.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Medium-Duty-Blue-60dia-Underbelt-Plastic-Conve...
Just an idea. Don't know how successfully it would work.
Given the wet weather and that it's gingerbread season, I've already done two bearing overhauls on customers' rolling pins in the past month. If you are going to be making a gingerbread house this Christmas I'd definitely upgrade to a Dura Ace pin if you can afford it.
Yew Wood need to Graft too much at this for me. Knot of interest.
Those ebay rollers you link to state a weight limit of 30kg. I'll need to loose a lot of weight before I can use them!
Good idea though; I may look into this further!
Presumably though three of them means a combined weight of 90kg?
This could be useful for rolling the gingerbread though!
Clearly a quiet day at GCN then...